Wallet was originally intended be the cover-all brand for Google's payment and monetary products and services. Google Wallet would record your transactions, allow you to store money in an account balance, transfer money to others, pay via NFC on your smartphone, buy things on the web, and process your transactions on Google Play by acting as a virtual... wallet, for your credit cards.

Google says this is all changing, and a new update to the Google Play payments support page reflects this. All references to Google Wallet, except those in regard to using your actual Google Wallet balance to pay for something, have been removed from this page. For example, the support page previously read:

You can purchase apps and digital content on Google Play using payment methods you've added to Google Wallet. If you don't have a Google Wallet account already, you'll be asked to create one when you make your first purchase. (emphasis ours)

It now reads:

You can purchase apps and digital content on Google Play using payment methods from your Google account. If it's your first time making a purchase, your payment method will be added to your Google account.

While it lacks the Google Payments branding, it's clear that's what Google means. Even going to wallet.google.com now presents you with a startling lack of references to Wallet (apart, again, from the Wallet balance), as we previously pointed out. Here are a few other changes to the page.

Old: You can add the following credit/debit cards to your Google Wallet

New: You can add the following credit/debit cards to your account

Old: The types of cards accepted through Google Wallet may vary by location

New: The types of cards accepted through Google Play may vary by location

Google previously confirmed to us that users could expect the Wallet name to slowly give way to Google Payments and Android Pay, while Wallet would stay on primarily as a money transfer service akin to PayPal. Android Pay will likely take over all of Wallet's mobile payment and card-repository responsibilities, while Google Payments will serve as a transaction history portal, the name for payments on the Play Store and on the web (for things like the Google Store), and as a general management interface.

This will leave Wallet with, essentially, one remaining purpose in the Google app portfolio: sending and receiving money from other Wallet users (and, relatedly, holding a balance). If you ask me, that all but confirms a designed death spiral for Wallet, with Google most likely just wanting to wait out the drain that will begin in earnest once Android Pay launches. Once that happens, there's no real reason for the Wallet app or service to exist as standalones, and I strongly suspect we'll see them merged under the Google Payments and Android Pay banners.

As for the Wallet card? There's no indication it was ever exactly popular, and it seems likely to me Google will just sweep that little experiment under the rug eventually. You can still order one, but there's been exactly zero new features or capabilities added to it since launch. A launch, by the way, that occurred a full year after we initially leaked the card with an identical set of features.

Why exactly the company feels the need to do a complete rebrand of its payment strategy remains unclear. What is clear is that Wallet has become something of a dirty word at Google.